New Study Reveals What Happens to Your Brain When You Ski...
It might go into "clean-up mode" right as you're trying to focus on that presentation.
Whatâs Happening
Listen up: It might go into âclean-up modeâ right as youâre trying to focus on that presentation.
When study participants took an attention test while sleep-deprive d, their brain scans showed signs of a sleep-like state linked to the brainâs nightly cleaning process. This could be the brainâs attempt to make up for missed sleep. (plot twist fr)
Skimping on sleepâand robbing your brain of time in âclean-up modeââcan have short- and long-term health consequences.
The Details
Youâre not yourself when you donât get enough sleep , making it hard to stay focused on just about anything. But the next time you notice yourself zoning out when youâre wiped, consider this: It may be your brainâs way of making time to clean itself.
Thatâs the main message from a recent study published in Nature Neuroscience. For the relatively small study, researchers compared peopleâs brain scans from when they got a good nightâs sleep to when they were sleep-deprived , and noticed some intriguing differences.
Why This Matters
We tapped a sleep medicine physician and neurologist for more. Christopher Winter, MD, is a neurologist and sleep medicine physician with Charlottesville Neurology and Sleep Medicine and host of the Sleep Unplugged podcast. Clifford Segil, DO , is a neurologist at Providence Saint Johnâs Health Center in Santa Monica, CA.
Medical professionals are taking note of this development.
Key Takeaways
- Researchers recruited 26 people and scanned their brains after they had a good nightâs sleep and again when they were sleep-deprived.
- While in the MRI, they also had the participants do a couple of tasks designed to check their focus.
- People did poorly on the attention tests when they were sleep deprived compared to when they were well-restedâno shocker there.
The Bottom Line
But hereâs where things get interesting: Attention âfailuresâ corresponded with an increased flow of cerebrospinal fluidâwhich surrounds and cushions the brainâout of their brains. This is a process that typically happens during sleep, and the researchers suggest that this may be the brainâs attempt to compensate for missed rest.
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